Refining Holocene sea-level variations for the Lofoten and Vesterålen archipelagos, northern Norway: implications for prehistoric human–environment interactions
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36129Dato
2024-03-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Balascio, Nicholas L; D'Andrea, William J.; Creel, Roger C.; Marshall, Leah; Dia, Moussa; Wickler, Stephen Kent; Anderson, R. Scott; Austermann, Jacqueline; Vasskog, Kristian; Nielsen, Pål Ringkjøb; Dahl, Svein OlafSammendrag
The Lofoten and Vesterålen archipelagos are located off the outer coast of northern Norway far from
the center of the former Fennoscandian Ice Sheet and near the continental shelf edge. Existing relative sea‐level (RSL)
data indicate a pronounced mid‐Holocene transgression and interesting connections with the region's prehistoric
human settlement history. Here we present seven new sea‐level index points from isolation basins and five terrestrial
limiting points from a coastal sedimentary sequence to refine the region's RSL history. Ingression and isolation
contacts in isolation basin sediment cores are identified using sedimentary geochemical data, scanning X‐ray
fluorescence profiles and phytoplankton analysis. The ages of these contacts are determined using radiocarbon‐based
age models. Our index points range from 11.2 to 1.5k cal a BP and are combined with previously published data to
predict the spatiotemporal evolution of sea level in this region using an ensemble of spatiotemporal empirical
hierarchical models (STEHME). The new RSL curve constrains the timing of the mid‐Holocene transgression, which
occurred from c. 9 to 6k cal a BP when sea level increased from −4 to 7 m above present day. From c. 6 to 5k cal a BP,
RSL rapidly fell to c. 4 m above present values, and more gradually declined at an average rate of c. 0.8 m ka−1 over
the last 5k cal a BP. Isobase maps derived using the STEHME show a decrease in the regional shoreline gradients since
the transgression maximum from 0.25 to 0.07 m km−1
. Our data also better define how RSL variations influenced the
location and preservation of coastal settlement locations and harbors from the early Stone Age through historic
intervals, improving understanding of regional human–environment interactions.
Forlag
WileySitering
Balascio NL, D'Andrea WJ, Creel, Marshall, Dia M, Wickler S, Anderson RS, Austermann J, Vasskog K, Nielsen PR, Dahl SO. Refining Holocene sea-level variations for the Lofoten and Vesterålen archipelagos, northern Norway: implications for prehistoric human–environment interactions. Journal of Quaternary Science. 2024;39(4):566-584Metadata
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